The U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District has issued an order giving Irving Picard, the Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities LLC liquidation trustee, permission to issue a second interim distribution to the victims of the Madoff Ponzi scam. Picard had asked to add $5.5 billion to the customer fund and issue a second payout of $1.5 billion to $2.4 billion to the investors that were harmed.
According to Bloomberg Businessweek, a $2.4 billion payout would be seven times more than what the bilked investors have been able to get back since Madoff, who is serving a 150-year prison term for his crimes, defrauded them. A huge part of the customer fund is on reserve because there are investors who have filed securities lawsuits contending they should be getting more.
Meantime, the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York has decided that the mortgage-backed securities lawsuit filed by insurance company Assured Guaranty Municipal Corp. against UBS Real Estate Securities Inc. can proceed. The plaintiff contends that UBS misrepresented the quality of the loans that were underlying the MBS it insured in 2006 and 2007.
Assured claims that the defendant was in breach of the pooling and servicing agreements involving three MBS certificates that it had insured. Because UBS allegedly misrepresented the quality of the underlying mortgage loans, it has to, per the contracts, repurchase them from Assured.
While Judge Harold Baer denied UBS motion to dismiss the insurer’s contention that the defendant misrepresented the loans’ quality, it agreed with the defendant that Assured cannot force UBS to repurchase them because certificate trustees are the only ones entitled to make sure the “repurchase obligation” is enforced.
In other institutional investment fraud news, the Securities and Exchange Commission has filed charges against Edward Bronson and his E-Lionheart Associates LLC. The two are accused of making over $10 million in a penny stock scam involving the reselling of billions of unregistered shares in about 100 small companies that they acquired at “deep discounts.”
Per the Commission, at Bronson’s direction, E-Lionheart would cold call penny stock companies to try to get them to obtain capital. If there was interest, the firm would offer to purchase shares in the concern at prices that were greatly lower than market value. The defendants would then start reselling the shares through brokers involved in unregistered sales.
The SEC says that while the defendants are invoking a registration exemption that exists under Rule 504(b)(1)(iii) of Regulation D, the Commission contends that this does not apply to these types of sales. The regulator is seeking disgorgement of over $10M, in addition to other penalties.
In an unrelated financial scam, this one involving a criminal case, a New York jury has convicted hedge fund manager Doug Whitman on securities fraud and conspiracy over his involvement in two insider trading schemes. Whitman, who is a Whitman Capital LLC portfolio manager, was charged with using insider trading tips to trade in Marvell Technology Group Ltd. (MRVL), Polycom Inc., (PLCM), and Google Inc. (GOOG) stocks. This allegedly caused him to generate over $900,000 in profits.
Prosecutors claim Whitman obtained the confidential information about the Marvell options and shares from an independent research consultant that received the information from the company’s employees. A colleague in the hedge fund industry gave him the information about Google and Polycom.
The SEC has also filed a civil lawsuit against Whitman and his financial firm. The securities fraud complaint is still pending.
Madoff Trustee’s Customer Payment May Reach $2.4 Billion, Bloomberg Businessweek, August 22, 2012
The Madoff Recovery Initiative
Assured Guaranty Municipal Corp. v. UBS Real Estate Securities Inc. (PDF)
Read the SEC’s Complaint against E-Lionheart Associates LLC (PDF)
California Hedge Fund Manager Doug Whitman Found Guilty in Manhattan Federal Court on All Counts for Insider Trading, FBI.gov, August 20, 2012
More Blog Posts:
Merrill Lynch Agrees to Pay $40M Proposed Deferred Compensation Class Action Settlement to Ex-Brokers, Stockbroker Fraud Blog, August 27, 2012
Securities Lawsuit Against Options Clearing Corporation and Chicago Board Options Exchange Can Proceed Says Illinois Appellate Court, Stockbroker Fraud Blog, August 24, 2012
2nd Circuit Affirms Dismissal of $18.5M Auction-Rate Securities Lawsuit Against Merrill Lynch Filed by Anschutz Corp., Institutional Investor Securities Blog, August 23, 2012